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6 May 1999 Edition

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Cinema: Love and division in Wexford

BY TARA O'LIATH.

In the 1950s, the village of Fethard-on-Sea, Wexford, made international news headlines when the Catolic Church ordered a boycott of all Protestants in the village. A Love Divided is the moving story of the events that led to it.

Brought to the screen by Buena Vista International and Parallel Films (Last of the High Kings, Amongst Women), the dramatic tale of married couple Sean Cloney, a Catholic, and Sheila Kelly, a Protestant, is marvellously written by Stuart Hepburn (Hamish Macbeth, McCallum) and directed by Syd McCartney.

Starring Liam Cunningham as Sean Cloney and Orla Brady as Sheila this film is about a love strong enough to endure and survive against all odds.

By refusing to honour the `ne temere' pledge of raising their children as Catholics, Sheila and Sean are catapulted into a world where they become pawns in a battle between churches, and through pressure put on Sean to have his children ``play for the right team'', a battle within their relationship.

Sheila, determined to make a stand and fight her corner, flees to Belfast with her children and on discovering Sean has issued legal proceedings with the aid of the church, to obtain custody of his children, she moves to the isolated Orkney Islands.

Following her disappearance, the previously quiet community becomes a battle ground of sectarian violence and intimidation as Fr. Stafford, played by Tony Doyle, accuses Reverend Fischer (Jim Norton) of conspiring to help Sheila ``kidnap'' her children and declares a boycott of all Protestants in the village.

What follows is a beautifully written account of Sean and Sheila's love that proves stronger than the pull on either side, the fear and hatred and ultimately the divison that external circumstances had on their own relationship.

A Love Divided goes on release nationwide on 14 May.

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